Recently package design of Marks & Spencer‘s store brands has improved (I will talk more later). Retro-feel Christmas biscuit tins is well-done (reference: gumo gazette), and is good for a present and gift. This tin box with London’s famous double-decker contains a selection of 27 shortbreads in 3 varieties, and costs £8. The package was designed by illustrator Phil Hankinson, and the his style resembles the old classic “This is London” (1959) by Czech illustrator and auther, Miroslav Sasek. You can re-use the tin box after finishing all biscuits, and this is a great souvenir of London as well.

先日、サーチ・ギャラリーに行った時に買った、グリーティング・カード（各£2.99）。ロンドンの風景のシルエットと、鮮やかな原色カラーを組み合わせた、シンプルだけど洗練されたデザインがとても素敵。このLandscapesシリーズには、ロンドンの他、ヨークシャー、スコットランド、湖水地方のものがある。作っているのは、2007年創業のThe Art Rooms社。「Inspired by the UK. Designed in the UK. Made in the UK.（イギリスにインスピレーションを受け、イギリスでデザイン。イギリス製）」を謳い、グリーティング・カード、プリント、台所用品やギフトを扱っている。同じくロンドン各地の風景を扱ったポストカードやマグカップ、テーブルマット、コースターもあり、ロンドン土産として喜ばれそう。ミュージアムショップやデザイン系雑貨を扱う店の他、オンラインストアでも買える。

These are the greeting cards (£2.99@) we purchased at the Saatchi Gallery. The design of combining a silhouette of London landscape with block of bright color is simple yet sleek. This landscapes series of greeting cards also includes Yorkshire, Scotland, and Lake district, as well as London. The The Art Rooms, which produced the greeting cards, was founded in 2007 and designs and creates greeting cards, prints kitchenware and gifts, with a concept of “Inspired by the UK. Designed in the UK. Made in the UK.” There are also postcards, bone china mugs, table mats and coasters with London’s landscapes, and those are perfect souvenirs from London. You can buy them at selected stores or at their online shop.

Long time ago, I studied about the East India Company in my high school’s world history class. After 135 years, it is back – and opened its first store in August 2010, on Conduit Street near Regent Street in London. This controversial Company was established in 1600 by the Royal Charter granted by Queen Elizabeth I, for the purpose for pursuing trade with the East. The Company had been a global trading power for over 250 years and had maintained a big military presence in India, until the Indian Rebellion of 1857 which led it loose all its administrative powers. The Company continued to manage the tea trade on behalf of the British government until the East India Stock Dividend Redemption Act came into effect on 1 January 1874, and the Company was dissolved under the terms.

In 2005, the company was purchased by an Indian-born businessman and started its business, focused on luxury food products (→the East India Company store website. you can shop online as well). I purchased “£19.90 for a Limited Edition Festive Gift Box (£49.30)” deal at Groupon (I wrote few days ago) , so I visited the London store for the first time to pick up the box and to buy some Christmas gifts. Its interior and packages are exotic and gorgeous. The store sells tea, chocolate, coffee, wines, jams, mustard and biscuits, as well as a range of gift boxes, hampers and trunks. Their products use highest quality ingredients, and some of its unconventional use of exotic spices such as chilli, nutmeg, peppercorn and mustard for biscuits and chocolates, is quite intriguing. There are some sample, so no risk of regret your purchase after you come back home and have a bite. Some combination may sound quite strange, but be open-minded and try something different – some are surprisingly tasty.

One set-back, though, is the quality of its package. When I opened the £8-worth gift box, it made crunchy noise and the glue came off… There is not much stuffing and products inside displaced all over the box. Bands of two chocolate boxes are loose, and the boxes opened and all the chocolate came out, scattered inside the shopping bag. The design is very sophisticated, but the package must be improved to secure all the contents stay in its place!

Our purchase of the day: Limited Edition Festive Gift Box (biscuits, on the bottom left with blue and white package, sold separately) and two chocolate boxes (I put all the chocolates nicely, picking them up from the shopping bag). You may not see well, but the shopping bag has gold emblem with a lion motif.

Recently I recognized that our favorite supermarket, Waitrose‘s Organic milk range has been replaced from “Waitrose Organic Fresh Milk” to “Duchy Originals from Waitrose”. I searched Wikipedia and found out that Duchy Originals had agreed an exclusive deal with Waitrose, for Waitrose to originate, manufacture, distribute and sell Duchy products, and this came into effect from this August. The products were relaunched under the new name “Duchy Originals from Waitrose” (formerly Duchy Originals), and the product range will be expand to around 500 from the previous range of around 200.

Duchy Originals is a brand of organic food and was originally set up in 1990 by Charles, Prince of Wales, who has been an advocator of organic food and environmental issues, and named after the Duchy of Cornwall estates that are held in trust by the Prince of Wales (Duchy means the territory of a duke or duchess). The products, including biscuits & snacks, preserves, meat, poultry & fish, desserts, bottled waters, soups and condiments & dressings, as well as hair & body care, are sold mainly in Waitrose in UK, but also in Booths supermarkets (I’ve never heard of it though) and small independent food stores. The Prince of Wales continue his involvement with the brand after the company’s deal with Waitrose, and the royalties is donated to charity The Prince’s Charities Foundation as before.

We often buy Duchy Originals products for souvenirs to abroad, as this is Prince Charles’ company and we can talk about it. Our pick for a souvenir is Highland Shortbread Tin. Shortbread is a traditional Scottish biscuit, but also popular in other parts of UK. Duchy Originals’ Highland shortbread is made using wheat and oats from the Duchy’s farm at Highgrove royal estate. The shortbread is in a classic design tin box, decorated with a watercolour, painted by Prince Charles, of the Balmoral estate in Scotland, and you can reuse the tin after you finish the biscuits. The price is quite reasonable at £6.99, but it looks expensive – highly recommended!